Here and Now | |
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Intertitle |
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Genre | Sitcom |
Created by | Tracy Gamble Jerry Perzigian Don Seigel Richard Vaczy |
Written by | Walter Allen Bennett, Jr. Bill Boulware Tracy Gamble Barry Gurstein Brian Kahn Mike Milligan Jay Moriarty Jerry Perzigian Marco Pennette David Pitlik Don Siegel Richard Vaczy |
Directed by | John Bowab |
Starring | Malcolm-Jamal Warner Charles Brown S. Epatha Merkerson Daryl "Chill" Mitchell Rachael Crawford Jessica Stone Pee Wee Love Shaun Weiss |
Opening theme | "Tennessee" by Arrested Development |
Composer(s) | Stu Gardner |
Country of origin | United States |
Language(s) | English |
No. of seasons | 1 |
No. of episodes | 15 (2 unaired) |
Production | |
Executive producer(s) | Bill Cosby George E. Crosby Tracy Gamble Mike Milligan Jay Moriarty Richard Vaczy |
Producer(s) | Barry Gurstein David Pitlik |
Camera setup | Videotape; Multi-camera |
Running time | 23 minutes |
Production company(s) | SAH Productions, Inc. NBC Productions |
Broadcast | |
Original channel | NBC |
Picture format | 480i (SDTV) |
Original run | September 19, 1992 – January 2, 1993 |
Here and Now is an American television sitcom that aired on NBC from September 19, 1992 to January 2, 1993. The series starred Malcolm-Jamal Warner in the lead role, who prior to this series co-starred in The Cosby Show which ended its run in Spring 1992. Bill Cosby served as one on the show's executive producers along with Warner serving as executive consultant credited as M.J. Warner. The song "Tennessee" by Arrested Development was used as the show's theme song.
Contents |
Alexander "A.J." James (Malcolm-Jamal Warner) is a recent college graduate who majored in psychology now attending post graduate school. He returns to his old neighborhood in Harlem to become a counselor at a local youth center.[1] While working at the center he is living with Sydney (Charles Brown), his non-biological uncle who works as a doorman for a living. The series co-stars included S. Epatha Merkerson as Ms. St. Marth as the head of the youth center (Brenda Pressley played the role in the pilot episode)[2], Daryl "Chill" Mitchell as T, a former delinquent now working at the center, Rachael Crawford as Danielle, Sydney's daughter, A.J's "cousin" and occasional love interest and Jessica Stone as Amy a fellow post grad student attending the same school as A.J., also working at the center. Pee Wee Love and Shaun Weiss also co-starred as A.J. counselees, Ramdall and William respectively.
Series # | Title | Notes | Original air date |
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1 | "Pilot" | No synopsis available. | September 19, 1992 |
2 | "Lovers and Other Dangers" | No synopsis available. | September 28, 1992 |
3 | "Trust Me" | No synopsis available. | October 3, 1992 |
4 | "One on Won" | No synopsis available. | October 10, 1992 |
5 | "Guess Who's Coming to the Center" | No synopsis available. | October 17, 1992 |
6 | "A Halloween Kiss (a.k.a. The Halloween Show)" | No synopsis available. | October 31, 1992 |
7 | "Love Handles" | No synopsis available. | November 14, 1992 |
8 | "Great Expectations" | No synopsis available. | November 21, 1992 |
9 | "A.J.'s Big Leap" | No synopsis available. | November 28, 1992 |
10 | "Take My Grandparents... Please!" | No synopsis available. | December 5, 1992 |
11 | "Backsliding" | No synopsis available. | December 12, 1992 |
12 | "Pre-Ring Circus" | No synopsis available. | January 2, 1993 |
13 | "My Bodyguard" | No synopsis available. | 1992 |
14 | "Grandma's Big Decision" | No synopsis available. | Unaired |
15 | "Pennies from Heaven" | No synopsis available. | Unaired |
It is commonly mistaken that Here and Now is a spin-off of The Cosby Show. That is not the case, due to the fact Malcolm-Jamal Warner played an entirely different character. This discrepancy is due to the many similarities between the A.J. character and Theo Huxtable, the character that Malcolm-Jamal Warner played on The Cosby Show. Some of similarities were that both characters were psychology majors and worked at community centers (Theo worked at a community center during The Cosby Show's final season). While promoting the show at the time, Warner stated that difference between A.J. and Theo was that A.J. was "more hip and street wise".[3]
Another connection besides Bill Cosby serving as executive producer, Here and Now cast members Charles Brown, S. Epatha Merkerson, Daryl "Chill" Mitchell and Shaun Weiss all previously guest starred on The Cosby Show.
The series aired on Saturday nights on NBC premiering on September 19, 1992 leading off the network's Saturday night lineup at the time. It was ultimately canceled on January 2, 1993 due to low ratings with two episodes unaired out of the fifteen episodes that were produced. Bill Cosby later admitted that he felt the show's cancellation was justified due to the series not being very well written.[4]